New York's Cooperative and Condominium Community

Habitat Magazine Insider Guide

HABITAT

BOARD OPERATIONS

HOW CO-OP/CONDO BOARDS OPERATE

Court Affirms Co-op Boards Can Target Individuals & Have Powers Not in Lease

Frank Lovece in Board Operations

Whether a matter of bureaucratic authoritarianism or wise financial prudence, the issue arose at the tony cooperative at 1045 Fifth Ave., near the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Thomas P. Kikis, who owns the shares of several apartments, wanted to use one of them, appraised at a cool $7 million, as collateral for $3 million home-equity line of credit. But the co-op board, headed by president Elisabeth Brenhouse, denied his denied his application for a recognition agreement, the standard document a lender generally needs from a co-op board before it can give a loan or a line of credit.

Dusting Off Levandusky

Goodman's April 11 decision in the case, Kikis v. 1045 Owners Corp., was based on the landmark — and, to co-op boards, highly familiar — Levandusky v. One Fifth Ave. Apt. Corp. The ruling in that 1990 case found that even in not-for-profit housing corporations, the corporate Business Judgment Rule applies. That means, in Goodman's words, that "the exercise of a board's power over the common and general interests of the corporation may not be questioned" — even, as in this case, when it prevents a shareholder from the common, everyday action of using one's duly owned shares as collateral for a line of credit.

The board's right to deny this standard financial instrument wasn't specified in the proprietary lease nor in the bylaws, however, prompting Kikis to sue the board alleging a breach of fiduciary duty -- which, along with discrimination and self-dealing, is one of the only exceptions to the Business Judgment Rule. (The policy was, however, stated in the Purchase Application and in a disputed Corporate Resolution passed without proper notice and, Kikis felt, targeted specifically against him.)

The court, however, did not find that Kikis — whom all agreed had finances and assets to support the line of credit — receiving disparate treatment. The board, Goodman wrote, "does not wish to have such an encumbrance on the shares allocated to apartments in the building…. This the Board has the power to decide."

She noted that when a shareholder claims a breach of fiduciary duty, he or she must show, very specifically,  that the board or its individual members acted outside of the scope of their authority, or in a way that did not legitimately further the co-op, or in bad faith.

Okay to Go After a Shareholder

In fact, quoting the case Konrad v. 136 E. 64th St. Corp., Goodman said co-op boards, remarkably, can even personally target a shareholder: "That the cooperative corporation's board of directors may have taken action that 'deliberately singles out individuals for harmful treatment' does not, ipso facto, expose the individual board members to liability."  If the shareholder — who generally does not have access to complete board-meeting minutes and certainly not to conversations among board members — cannot prove "independent tortious conduct to any individual," then the board can get away with singling him or her out for harmful treatment.

She granted the board's motion to dismiss the case, establishing once more, in the words of the decision, that a board's power "for the common and general interests of the corporation may not be questioned," even if the results are "unwise or inexpedient."

For articles going back to 2002, join our Archive >>

Ask the Experts

learn more

Learn all the basics of NYC co-op and condo management, with straight talk from heavy hitters in the field of co-op or condo apartments

Professionals in some of the key fields of co-op and condo board governance and building management answer common questions in their areas of expertise

Source Guide

see the guide

Looking for a vendor?